View
214
Download
0
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
OutlineVoice Technology Populations and ImplementationsVoice Mail Populations and ImplementationsDynamics of the Voice Technology LandscapesKey Campus IssuesCampus 5-7 Year “Horizon” “Evolutionary” not “Revolutionary” changesPotential VoIP Service Models“Utility Network” – A network for utilities?Issues in a shared closet environment
UCSB Voice Technology “Populations”
Analog4422
Digital “Key” Systems (120)
1800 Lines
KITP CCM ~100
CHEMAsterisk
~100
Verizon467
Emer. Phones
288
ACDDigital50 sets
University PaidCellular(non-893)
893 numbers* attached to UCSB PBX approximately 5492Standard: 4134Emergency Phone: 288VoIP: 358ACD: 50Temporary Disconnect: 700
AT&T~300
Other?
PhysicsAsterisk
~125
“Soft Phones”e.g.
Skype, magic-jack??
Campus Voice Mail
Dept. VoIP Systems (Trunk Attached)
Comm3CX~15 Actual Number of sets
estimated to be 5500+
Hybrid Analog/Digital Phone Environment at UCSB The telephone switch (PBX) at UCSB provides analog telephone lines which support any standard
analog telephone instrument. Telephone instruments are purchased by departments or projects. An analog telephone line may be connected to a departmental or building digital telephone system. At UCSB there are about 120 Panasonic Digital Telephone Systems (DBSs) which require digital
Panasonic DBS telephones. Many of these were acquired as part of a building construction or renovation project.
These systems allow multiple lines to appear on a set and include features such as intercom. Approximately 1800 of about 4300 campus customer telephone lines are connected to a Panasonic
DBS system. There are more instruments than there are telephone lines.
Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN)
Analog Lines
Digital
PBX
Digital Telephone System
Trunks
Voicemail
Emergency Telephones
A few of the different VoIP models
Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN)
Central Gateway
“Soft” Phone
Trunks
“Private” Wide-Area Network
Internet
Departmental/Building Network
Departmental/Building Network
Trunk to Dept. VoIP Gateway
Analog to VoIP adapter (FXO)
Peer-To-Peer (e.g. Skype)
VoIP Based Carrier (e.g. Vonage, magicJack)
VoIP Gateway Service magicJack
SIP client app. using data connection on Cellular Phone
Wireless Network
SIP Phones
Campus Backbone NetworkCentral Gateway
P2P to gateway
VoIP Carrier Service (e.g. Vonage)
Analog Phones
PBX
Voice Mail PopulationsCampus Voice Mail system provides mailboxes to
“analog” lines, and ACD Digital Sets for about 2200 lines.VoIP systems provide their own voice mailEach wireless Carrier provides it’s own voice mail system
and is generally “standard”Some users may be using “add-on” voice mail systems
such as Google Voice
Voice Mail IssuesIt is not generally possible to transfer voice mail
messages to users outside the particular voice mail system.
Caller information other than number is not generally available for callers outside the system to which the voice mail system is attached.
Presumably because of cost, many campus lines do not have voice mail.
Voice Mail delivery to email is not a standard feature of many systems (PBX, Cellular).
Dynamics of the Voice Technology User Populations
A growing segment embraces or prefers mobility.Continuing use of email, texting, IM, facebook in some
populations reduces the use of traditional voice technologies (including cellular voice).
Growing adoption of network based collaboration tools such as conferencing, screen sharing, video conferencing.
Some users continue to rely on “Business Features” such as shared lines, call controllers, conferencing.
Some users with only a personal cellular phone prefer not to publish that phone as their business number.
Dynamics of the Voice Industry LandscapeContinuing maturity of VoIP solutions, and
standardization/commoditization of VoIP instruments, though vendor differences remain.
Voice Enabled applications are increasingly using VoIP technologies instead of proprietary telephone interfaces.
2 major open source VoIP platforms, Asterisk and SipXecs.“Unified Communications” and “Collaboration” tools continue to
advance and are an adjunct and a competitor of “traditional” voice services (including VoIP and cellular).
Wireless Carriers are a major competitor of wired voice services of all kinds (traditional and VoIP). However, Wireless carriers still do not offer many of the traditional “business system” features and coverage remains problematic.
Dynamics of the Voice Industry LandscapeInfrastructure
Underground copper cabling becoming a “legacy” technology.
Copper cable costs escalating.Underground copper cable maintenance skills
increasingly expensive and difficult to obtain.Traditional land-line telcos have found their customer
base eroding, reducing their investment in underground cable plant.
Dynamics of the Campus Voice Technology LandscapeGeneral ItemsMultiple voice and voice mail systems (PBX, VoIP,
Cellular).Intense budget pressure.Current voice recharge model causing departments to cut
telephone lines and voice mail making people harder to reach.
Initiatives to improve “effectiveness”.
Dynamics of the Campus Voice Technology LandscapeCampus PBXCampus telephone system CPUs and software level are
no longer supported by manufacturer.However, many users continue to require some of the
business features provided by such systems.Large Analog instrument base with little money for
replacement, or little need for additional features.PBX does not support direct VoIP attachment.UCSB’s system is same as is used by County of Santa
Barbara, City of Santa Barbara. Some opportunity for interconnection during emergencies.
Dynamics of the Campus Voice Technology LandscapeInfrastructureAs in the industry, underground copper cable costs are
escalating.Underground copper cable maintenance skills are
increasingly expensive and difficult to obtain.Older large cable runs require pressurization to prevent
water incursion.
Dynamics of the Campus Voice Technology LandscapeTelephone Instruments
Telephone instruments departmentally owned or purchased by building project.
Approximately 300 special-purpose elevator and outdoor analog emergency phones.
Campus standard Panasonic Digital systems in use have been discontinued for about 7 years and replacement parts are becoming more difficult to obtain.
Panasonic systems are not “agile”, and require field-visits for programming using a keypad interface.
Panasonic configurations are not “self-documenting”Panasonic systems do not generally provide caller-id.
Dynamics of the Campus Voice Technology LandscapeBusiness Features
Many workgroups continue to require business features such as shared lines, hold, transfer, intercom.
Call-Queuing and Call Management features required by some high volume groups (BARC, Registrars Office, etc.)
Many departments use call trees.Current Call Management platform not very agile.Little integration with mobile instruments.
Dynamics of the Campus Voice Technology Landscape Cellular/Wireless
Cellular coverage remains problematic inside many buildings.
Wireless data network coverage (which could allow wireless VoIP alternatives) is not ubiquitous.
In some buildings RF intrusion/interference is a concern.Wireless voice quality is generally less than that of wired
voice systems.Business type features not available.Capacity/Availability could be problematic during an
emergency.
Key Campus IssuesPBX becoming unsupported with current CPUs/Software.Continued need to support analog base/business features.While VoIP may be a cost effective alternative in new
installations/renovations, little incentive or money to overhaul existing installations.
Managing multiple telephone systems is inefficient.Cellular/Wireless coverage/features not yet adequate for
many users. Cellular as an alternative is not likely to be less costly than land-lines.
Migration to telco based service “Centrex” more costly.Potential for technology change within 10 years.
5 to 7 year “Horizon”The “next generation” of voice service could be wireless
and/or data network based, but clarity has not arrived.The campus needs a reliable and cost effective solution
to continue to provide basic service for the next 5 to 7 years.
Aside from perceived issues of cost, there are many situations where things are not “broken.”
There are situations where VoIP instruments are a logical and cost effective alternative to analog lines.
There are situations where more advanced features and improved agility could provide additional effectiveness.
“Evolutionary” not “Revolutionary” Change
Proposal to update PBX to current CPUs and Software.Preserve current investment and installed base.Minimize major capital outlays.Minimize technical complexity.Provide enhanced voice and voice-mail features and
integration where it provides additional effectiveness.Take advantage of VoIP technology where it makes sense.Take advantage of cellular/wireless where it makes sense.Find ways to improve cost effectiveness and integration
of mobile devices (cellular/wireless).
Potential central VoIP modelsSupport “to the desk” - a separate building network (POE
switches) within the building. This would require management/tracking of moves/changes, and some coordination with departmental network administrators.
“Gateway” service – a “public” VoIP gateway available to soft-phones, and customer configured SIP instruments. Problem resolution becomes a collaborative event between provider and departmental network administrators.
What are the issues involved?What standards/architecture should be in place?
“Utility Network” – a common network for utilities?
There are a growing number of utilities using the network:Campus centrally managed wireless networkBuilding management systemsBuilding security systems (cameras)Potential VoIP services
Do we want a proliferation of networks within buildings (multiple independently managed switches?)
What are the issues in a “shared closet” environment?